Tequel
A authenticated simetric encrypt engine (AEAD), robust and caotic built in Rust.
Tequel 0.4.0 High-Performance AEAD: Certified Entropy of 7.99985 and Avalanche Stability over 112M iterations. Use for research, high-speed obfuscation, and experimental secure storage. Formal side-channel audit pending.
By Gabriel Xavier : ]
Summary
π Stress and Safety report (v0.3.0 - v0.4.0)
A Tequel v0.4.0 was submitted strict tests to ensure your robustness:
1. Colision Test (Avalanche Test)
Using a stress script to compare hashes of millions of unique inputs:
Result: 110.600.000+ iterations with none colision found.
Status: β Approved for use in identification and integrity systems.
2. Entropy Analize (Shannon Entropy)
We measured an imprevisibility of generated bytes to ensure that hash be indistinguishable of pure random noise.
Obtained entropy: 7.999885 bits/byte (MΓ‘ximo teΓ³rico: 8.0).
Status: π Excellent. The result reaches TEQUEL a statistical threshold of algorithms as SHA-256 and AES in terms of cargo distribution.
3. Memory Forensic Resistance (Zeroize Memory)
To prevent sensitive data from lingering in RAM after processing, TEQUEL v0.4.0 implements active memory cleaning.
-
Mechanism: Integration with the
zeroizeframework to ensure thatKeysandSalts, andPlaintextbuffers are overwritten with zeros immediately after the object is dropped. -
Protection: Mitigates Cold Boot Attacks and memory dump forensics, ensuring that cryptographic secrets "evaporate" from the system's memory as soon as the operation is completed.
Status: π Hardened. Memory lifecycle is now strictly managed by Rust's ownership system combined with volatile memory wiping.
βοΈ What does Tequel do?
- Confidentiality: Leverages XOR operations, Modular-Arithmetics, an Bitwise Wrapping with internal constants to "mask" and secure data.
- Integrity (MAC): Implements Message Authentication Codes to validade if data was tampered with before attempting decryption.
- Salting: Dynamically generates salts to ensure that the same input always produces unique, non-deterministic ciphertexts.
- Encrypt-then-MAC (EtM) Architecture: Follows the industry-standard EtM approach for superior security, ensuring that integrity is verified before any cryptographic processing.
π₯ How to Install and Use
- Install with Cargo
cargo install tequel-rs
- Add in your
cargo.toml's project
[]
= "0.4.0"
- Use in your project
use TequelHash;
βοΈ Guide
Welcome to Tequel's Guide, here you will understand how each function of Tequel works.
- Tequel RNG β Low-level random number generation.
- Tequel Hash β Deterministic and non-deterministic hashing.
- Tequel Encryption β Authenticated encryption flow.
Why the name 'Tequel'?
"Tequel" is a biblical reference from the Book of Daniel.
"Mene, Mene, Tequel, Parsim" β Daniel 5:25-28
This is a mysterious Aramaic phrase written by a divine hand on the wall during the Babylonian King Belshazzar's feast.
The prophet Daniel interpreted the message, which announced the end of Belshazzar's reign: God had numbered the kingdom, weighed the king, and divided the empire between the Medes and Persians. The kingdom fell that very night.
TEQUEL means "Weighed" or "Heavy." I chose this name because:
The Mystery: The message was "decrypted" by Daniel, a perfect metaphor for an encryption library.
The Weight: It represents the "heavy" security and robustness that Tequel provides to your data.
License
MIT License - free to use, modify and integrate.